BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) — The Egyptian ambassador to the Palestinian Authority expressed Cairo’s condemnation Wednesday of attacks targeting protesters. Yasser Othman was speaking during a visit to Nabi Saleh to extend his condolences to the family of Mustafa Tamimi. He said Egypt stood in solidarity with the village and considered it a model of resolve against settlements.

JERUSALEM — EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton on Tuesday condemned the disproportionate use of force by Israeli troops after the death of a Palestinian who was hit in the face with a tear gas canister. Mustafa Abdelrazek al-Tamimi was critically wounded during a weekly demonstration in the West Bank village of Nabi Saleh on Friday after being struck by an Israeli tear gas canister fired at close range. He was evacuated to an Israeli hospital but died the next day of his wounds. “The High Representative deeply regrets the tragic death of Mustafa Tamimi from the village of Nabi Saleh,” Ashton’s office said in a statement received in Jerusalem. “Mr Tamimi was protesting against the systematic expropriation of the village’s land and water spring by the inhabitants of the settlement of Halamish,” said the statement.

Friday morning, December 9th, my friend and I set out to experience a West Bank protest. It was a first for both of us, seeing as I have Arabic class every Friday, and he lives in Tel Aviv. As protest virgins, we had no idea what to expect. What did a confrontation look like? How do people protest? How would the soldiers react? I’d heard tales of people dodging tear gas canisters and running from the Israeli Defense Force (IDF). After four months of living in Bethlehem, I wanted to experience it for myself.http://mondoweiss.net/2011/12/tamimi-was-killed-because-of-occupied-villages-insistence-on-access-to-its-only-well.html

I was Mustafa Tamimi, Refaat Alareer
Fifteen years ago I was Mustafa Tamimi. Two months before that it was a relative who had his skull smashed by an explosive bullet from an Israeli sniper. Later that same week another neighbor lost his eye. Before and since then, the same situation has been repeating itself again and again: an armored jeep, a soldier armed to teeth, a tiny figure of mere flesh and bones, and a stone smeared with blood on the side of the road. That’s the saga of Palestine. That’s our tale, full of injustice and oppression, whose hero struts and frets and whoever gets in his way is doomed. But we get in his way anyway.

International human rights organizations have accused Israeli authorities of escalating operations to destroy Palestinian property over the past year. They asserted that “When compared to 2010, [the occupation had] doubled the pace of home demolitions and destruction of wells.” In a joint statement signed by over twenty human rights organizations including Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and Oxfam, they stated that “Jewish settler violence against Palestinians has increased since 2011 and Israel has accelerated the expansion of settlements.”

“From the 1970′s until today, the Israelis used to demolish our tents and houses but not to deport us” says Abu Hamis, a member of the Jahalin Bedouin tribe . “We used to rebuild our places but the new policy which they are adopting is that they want to not only demolish the houses, but to deport us from the area.” Abu Hamis lives in the tinyvillageof Khan Al-Ahmar, located in the arid, rocky East Jerusalem periphery where steep mountain slopes plummet to the Jordan Valley and the Dead Sea. The Israeli settlement of Ma’ale Adumim, considered illegal under international law, is visible on the hill above the village. The settlement is currently home to around 35,000 people; however,Israel has plans to expand it to create a city of 100,000.

The collective punishment of Silwan
The people of Silwan deal with the collective punishment of living under Israeli occupation on a daily basis, possibly the most common example being the issue of traffic in the village. While Israeli settlers and their private guards drive with impunity and break traffic regulations without recourse, a suffocating system of police-manned flying checkpoints monitor and restrict the movement of Palestinian drivers. Checkpoints are used as a means of issuing tickets for alleged traffic violations to Palestinian drivers, as well as a site of constant harassment and provocation. This week a local youth reported being told by a police officer at a traffic checkpoint to “go to Gaza if you don’t like it here.” Despite a large body of documentation and testimonies from Palestinian citizens of Silwan attesting to the misdeeds of the Israeli forces, settlers and their guard squads, Palestinian complaints to Israeli authorities and regulation bodies are dismissed as a rule.

Muhammed Salman Abu Rashad, 45, Amna Abu Rashad, 31, and their nine children live in the Jabalia refugee camp, one of the most densely populated areas on earth. The family represent just 11 of the 1.1 million refugees who make up the vast majority of Gaza’s population of approximately 1.7 million people. According to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), Jabalia is the largest of Gaza’s eight refugee camps and is home to around 110,000 registered refugees in an area of only 1.4 square kilometres; unsurprisingly, the camp is infamous for its overcrowding. Israel’s illegal closure policy, first used to isolate the Gaza Strip in 1991, has been particularly devastating on the residents of Jabalia camp, who, like Muhammed Abu Rashad, previously relied on jobs within Israel to support their families. Since the beginning of the complete closure of Gaza in 2007, the now-unemployed residents have been forced to rely on UNRWA aid to survive.

The deputy head of the Islamic Movement in the 1948-Occupied Territories (Israel) has said that Israel’s current targeting of the Palestinians in the Negev is “part of the displacement scheme which has been ongoing since the Nakba (catastrophe) of 1948″. According to Sheikh Kamal Al Khatib, Israel aims to “empty the Negev of its indigenous people and replace them with Jews”. This policy is part of the overall Judaisation of the area initiated by Israeli President Shimon Peres. Sheikh Al Khatib told the media that the Palestinians “are the legitimate owners of the land, and their presence preceded Israel’s existence by thousands of years”. He added that even the villages which the Israelis say are “unrecognised”, are each “more than 200 years old”.

This morning at the Eretz border in Beit Hanoun, Israeli soldiers shot a 14-year-old boy, Nedal Khaleel Hamdan. We went to the hospital to meet him. We found him sitting on the bed with his left shoulder bandaged, surrounded by his family. Nedal was collecting metal along with other boys in an area near the border. Often young people his age collect metal, then sell it to earn some money and help their families as well. At about 8:30 in the morning, Israeli soldiers started shooting at them; Nedal and the other fled, but while they were running Nedal was hit in the shoulder by a bullet.

Local youth and Israeli soldiers injured; six youth arrested
Israeli forces arrested 6 Palestinian youth between 14 and 20 years of age during a clash between Palestinians and Israeli soldiers near Damascus Gate on Sunday, 11 December. Several women and children were also assaulted by Israeli forces, leaving two women and one child with head injuries. Eyewitnesses state that 4 Israeli troops also sustained bruises. Witnesses claim that clashes were sparked when a soldier assaulted a 12-year old Palestinian child in Sultan Sulaiman Street in East Jerusalem. When local youths attempted to intervene, fights erupted between them and Israeli soldiers. The violence escalated when backup troops arrived, who started beating youths and passers-by with batons. Three Palestinian residents sustained head injures as a result.

Israeli forces storm homes in Shuafat and Old City
Israeli forces stormed two Palestinian families’ homes in East Jerusalem on Saturday night, 10 December. The Khayat family home in the Old City was raided and the Abed home in Shuafat camp, with one arrested and one summoned for investigation. The Old City home of Kamal al-Khayat and his family was raided earlier in the evening and searched extensively by armed forces. Photos and other belongings of their 22-year old son, Ibrahim, were confiscated. Israeli forces used sniffer dogs and turned off the building’s power supply during the raid. No search warrant was shown to the family. Ibrahim Khayat was then arrested and taken to the Russian compound. He was released some hours later and is expected to be summoned for further investigation. The house of Ahmad Hasan Abed’s family was then stormed in Shuafat. Sniffer dogs were also let loose in the house. Abed’s 25-year old son Ghasan was summoned to attend investigation on 11 December in Nabi Yaob police station.

BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) — An attack on a Palestinian holy site in Jerusalem gave some Israelis pause Wednesday, after right-wing activists brought to home the tactics more often employed in the occupied West Bank. After stepping up acts of vandalism and even attacking an army base, an extremist minority of Jewish Israelis has sparked condemnation from across the country’s political spectrum.

“I see my situation as a cowboy film, like the wild west” says Hani Jaber, showing ISM a poster, written in Arabic saying: ‘Wanted: if anyone has any information about the whereabouts of the killer Hani Jaber, please call us on this number and you will receive a reward.’ The number goes through to an answer machine where the message instructs callers to leave a phone number, promising to guarantee confidentiality and to pay good money. Other leaflets have been handed out showing pictures of Jaber and other recently released prisoners, offering rewards for information and leaflets for soldiers so that they can alert settlers if Hani passes through a checkpoint. Reports in the Israeli media suggest that the reward is $100,000 for information on Hani’s whereabouts.

Israeli military enters northern Gaza
GAZA CITY (Ma’an) — Israeli forces entered northern Gaza near Erez crossing on Thursday morning, witnesses and the army said. Locals told Ma’an bulldozers dug up land and opened fire toward but no injuries were reported. An Israeli military spokesman said soldiers were conducting “routine activity” in the area but said he was not familiar with any shooting. On Wednesday, Israeli forces shot a man east of Gaza City.
http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=445140

The Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR) expresses concern over the extreme shortage of medicines in the Gaza Strip hospitals. PCHR warns of the potential catastrophic repercussions on the health of the Gaza Strip population, especially patients who suffer from renal failure due to the shortage in blood filters used in dialysis.

RAFAH, Egypt (Ma’an) — Egyptian authorities on Wednesday deported 17 Palestinians who were in the country illegally, Egyptian security sources said. Security officials at the Rafah border between Egypt and Gaza told Ma’an that 17 Palestinians were detained on the road to Cairo and sent back to Gaza. In some cases, the migrants’ visas had expired while others had entered Egypt through underground tunnels, the officials said.

GAZA CITY (Ma’an) — The government in the Gaza Strip reiterated Tuesday that no Palestinian factions based in the enclave were involved in August’s attack on Eilat in southern Israel. Interior Ministry spokesman Ihab Ghussein was responding to speculation on Israeli websites that said Israel had determined it was 12 Bedouins who carried out the operation. His ministry had reiterated repeatedly that there was no evidence to support the allegation that anyone in Gaza was responsible, despite the Israeli army’s initial claims it was the Popular Resistance Committees.

Activists shut down normalization conference in Jerusalem
Jerusalem activists successfully had the Ambassador Hotel cancel their hosting of events in the planned Israeli Palestinian Confederation Conference on Tuesday, 13 December. The conference, organized by Jerusalem University director Dr. Sari Nsaibeh and former Israeli foreign affairs minister Shlomo Bena’mi, was to see the election for the parliament and a chairman for the so-called Israeli- Palestinian Confederation. Protesters gathered outside the hotel to condemn the process of normalization of the occupation promoted by the conference, amidst the collapse of the peace process, continuing settlement construction and the confiscation of Palestinian land. Conference events taking place in Beit Jalah and Haifa over the next few days have promoted a false illusion of Palestine already being liberated and contributed to the normalization of the Israeli occupation. One demonstrator commented that “how would such a confederation even be possible under the occupation?” The management of the Ambassador Hotel announced their decision to cancel the conference events in a printed statement posted at the hotel’s entrance. A hotel manager stated that “we have been manipulated by the conference organizers, who did not reveal to us its real purposes. We refuse to take part in their attempts to veil the reality of Palestinian suffering.”
http://silwanic.net/?p=22837

Yesterday morning from 11 to noon, Jerusalem time, activists launched a Twitter campaign using the hashtag #Israelkills. The campaign, started by a small group of anonymous Palestinian activists and journalists, called on activists across the world to participate by tweeting the #IsraelKills hashtag. The response was impressive, with over 5,000 tweets in under 24 hours.

On November 16, the Berkeley Jewish Student Union (JSU), voted against accepting JStreetU as an official member of the student union. JStreetU, an affiliate of J Street, had been active on-campus for approximately a year-and-a-half.

BDS Update: BDS Unites East and West
Just in case there was an iota of doubt left in your mind, Israel was officially declared an apartheid state during a session of the Russell Tribunal on Palestine in Cape Town on 7 November. Among depositions, the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights in Gaza cited the Fourth Geneva Convention and the 2002 Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court which prohibits “the transfer, directly or indirectly, by the Occupying Power of parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies.”

Nazareth suburb’s mayor: Christmas trees ‘provocative’
NAZARETH ILLIT, Israel (AFP) — The mayor of a Jewish suburb of Nazareth sparked outrage on Wednesday after refusing to allow Christmas trees to be placed in town squares, calling them provocative. Predominantly Jewish Nazareth Illit, or Upper Nazareth, is adjacent to Nazareth, where Christians believe Jesus spent much of his life. It has a sizable Arab Christian minority, as does mostly Muslim Nazareth itself.
http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=344641

Israeli democracy watch: proposed muezzin law
The public and international unrest over antidemocratic legislation in Israel is making an impact on the political arena. Sunday, December 11, 2011 Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was forced to withdraw his support for a law that would ban mosques from using loudspeaker systems for the call to prayer.

Israeli democracy watch: new bill to force companies to invest in West Bank
On Wednesday, December 7, 2011, Chairman of the National Union party, Knesset Member Yaakov Katz, proposed a bill calling for the dismantling of Israeli companies that boycott certain areas, such as the the illegally occupied West Bank, or that do not supply goods and services to those places.
http://www.alternativenews.org/english/index.php/topics/israeli-society/3990-israeli-democracy-watch-new-bill-to-force-companies-to-invest-in-west-bank

Jewish conference to honor Susan Rice
“America remains deeply and permanently committed to Israel’s peace and security. It is a commitment for this president and this Administration. It spans generations. It spans political parties. It is not negotiable. And it never will be,” Rice will say. ”From the moment he took office, President Obama’s guidance has been clear: to strengthen and deepen that commitment. He has been clear all along that our special relationship with Israel is deeply rooted in our common interests and our common values.” ”That’s why we’ve increased cooperation between our militaries to unprecedented levels. That’s why, even in these tough fiscal times, we’ve increased foreign military financing to record levels. That’s why we’ve also included additional support for the lifesaving Iron Dome anti-rocket system — which saw action just days ago in defense of innocent Israelis who live near the Gaza frontier.”

Bodyguard of Palestinian commander ‘killed in Lebanon’
BEIRUT (Ma’an) — The bodyguard of a top Palestinian commander was shot dead on Wednesday in a refugee camp in southern Lebanon, a local official told Lebanese media. “At around 10:00 p.m., a masked gunman shot and killed Ashraf Qadiri at his shop here in the Ain al-Hilweh camp,” Munir Maqdah, in charge of security at the camp near Saida, told Now Lebanon. Qadiri was a bodyguard for Mohammed Abdel Hamid Issa, alias “Al-Lino,” the head of Palestinian party Fatah’s police force in Ain al-Hilweh, according to the Beirut-based news site. The shooting was the second such incident targeting one of Issa’s bodyguards, Now said.

“The Arab People Have Woken Up”: Yemeni Activist Tawakkol Karman Accepts Nobel Peace Prize
The 2011 Nobel Peace Prize was presented this weekend to three women for “their non-violent struggle for the safety of women and for women’s rights to full participation in peace-building work.” Democracy Now! aired highlights on Monday of the acceptance speeches of Liberian activist Leymah Gbowee and Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, the first democratically elected female head of state on the African continent. Today we complete our coverage with the acceptance speech of Tawakkol Karman from Yemen, the first Arab woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize, as well as its youngest winner to date. Karman, a 32-year-old mother of three and an outspoken journalist and activist, has agitated for press freedoms and staged weekly sit-ins to demand the release of political prisoners from jail. She founded Women Journalists Without Chains and has played a leading part in the struggle for women’s rights and for democracy in Yemen. Most recently, she has led rallies in the protests against the rule of the longstanding U.S. ally, President Ali Abdullah Saleh. “The Arab world is today witnessing the birth of a new world, which tyrants and unjust rulers strive to oppose. But in the end, this new world will inevitably emerge,” Karman says. “Our oppressed people have revolted, declaring the emergence of a new dawn in which the sovereignty of the people, and their invincible will, will prevail. The people have decided to break free and walk in the footsteps of civilized free people of the world.”

FALLUJAH, Iraq — Hundreds of Iraqis set alight US and Israeli flags on Wednesday as they celebrated the impending pullout of American forces from the country in the former insurgent bastion of Fallujah. Shouting slogans in support of the “resistance,” the demonstrators held up banners and placards inscribed with phrases like, “Now we are free” and “Fallujah is the flame of the resistance.” Surrounded by the Iraqi army, demonstrators carried posters bearing photos of apparent insurgents, faces covered and carrying weapons.

The CIA in Lebanon is going into damage control after Hezbollah recently exposed more details about alleged CIA activities. Many are, however, asking why Hezbollah went public with such valuable information.

Hezbollah: It is Possible to Fix the “Mistake” of Releasing Israeli Spies
The Lebanese appeals court attorney general Said Mirza expressed “shock” at the decision taken by a Lebanese military court last week to release four people convicted of collaborating with Israel. But Hezbollah got the message straight away. Hezbollah’s MP Nawwar Sahili and its Coordination and Liaison Unit chief, Wafiq Safa, visited judge Mirza at his office on Tuesday to understand what happened. However both left the meeting without making a statement. They also met with justice minister Shakib Kortbawi for the same reason and left without making a statement yet again.

Hizbullah in the New York Times: drugs and car salesman
Regarding the front page article in the New York Times. I will say this right at the outset: I don’t know anything about the finances or intelligence work of secret organizations. They people who know, don’t know, and the people who talk are paid or unpaid propagandists for the Government of Israel. Remember this. There is absolutely nothing convincing in the New York Times article. Let me also say: the US government officials are here proud of themselves that they blew the cover on Hizbullah’s drug activities but they are too ignorant to know that the case received barely any coverage in the Arabic press. This is a US obsession and not an Arab obsession (the “war on drugs”, that is–the “morality” or immorality of it, does not travel across cultures. Also, the case against the bank was revealed just after the fall of Sa`d Hariri cabinet: so the political motives of the US were underlined in few articles on the matter in Lebanon. Thirdly, the guys of the bank are known to be close to Amal and NOT to Hizbullah. But those differences mean nothing to the propagandists of Israel. Who cares about facts when the motives are serving Israel.

The Obama administration came out publicly and privately against the Menendez-Kirk Iran sanctions amendmentbefore it was tweaked by a conference committee. But does it support the new sanctions language now that it has emerged from conference? That remains a secret.

Drones over Iran seemed bad enough, but drones over a family farm in North Dakota? Because of six purloined cows? That’s the stunning story broken by the Los Angeles Times Sunday: in the plain states as elsewhere, local police forces have taken to calling in the drones, turning these creepy neo-spying craft on United States citizens living on United States soil.

Saudi Arabia’s Prince Turki al-Faisal warned on Monday that an attack on Iran would have “cataclysmic” consequences on the region, the Saudi online daily Arab News reported. Faisal was addressing academics when he highlighted the dangers of an attack on Iran over its nuclear program, instead calling for a nuclear and weapons of mass destruction (WMD) free zone in the Middle East.

West seeks Saudi Arabia’s help on Iran oil sanctions
The U.S. and its allies hope the kingdom will boost output to prevent oil prices from climbing as they pressure Iran on its nuclear program. In a new effort to persuade Iran to halt its nuclear program, the Obama administration and its European allies are asking Saudi Arabia to help them squeeze Iran’s vital oil sector without driving up world energy prices and damaging the global economy.

The “New Anti-Semitism” Smear Is Getting Old, Max Blumenthal
Last week began with former AIPAC flack Josh Block accusing writers at two progressive think tanks in Washington of advancing the “new” anti-Semitism, conflating their criticisms of Israeli policies with straightforward Jew-hatred.
http://english.al-akhbar.com/blogs/gadfly/new-anti-semitism-smear-getting-old?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+AlAkhbarEnglish+%28Al+Akhbar+English%29

Is Josh Block still flacking for Aipac? The Washington Post reports that two Beltway think tanks with which Josh Block is associated may cut ties with him after he singlehandedly initiated a witch hunt against a group of progressive foreign policy bloggers associated with Media Matters and Center for American Progress. Block and his most recent previous employer, Aipac, are known for their attack-dog style of pro-Israel lobbying. In this case, he was pursuing an ideological vendetta against Eric Alterman, Matt Duss, Eli Clifton and M.J. Rosenberg, known for their critical perspective on U.S. policy in the Israeli-Arab conflict. Among other charges, Block accused M.J. Rosenberg of raising the dual loyalty canard through use of the term “Israel Firster.” He also claimed some of the arguments were anti-Israel and “borderline anti-Semitic.”

Top Arab Revolution Stories the US Media Ignored, Juan Cole
Long time human rights activist Moncef Marzouki became Tunisia’s president this week. Tunisians wept, at the idea that this principled man, forced into exile by the dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, should now himself tread the official red carpet as president of his country. Marzouki is an admirer of Mahatma Gandhi and a secularist. Some 40 members of parliament, on the left, boycotted the vote that made him interim president, on the grounds that he had compromised too much with the Muslim fundamentalist party, al-Nahda, which has about 40 percent of seats in parliament and which has formed the government. But given that it is the largest party in parliament, al-Nahda was going to form the government one way or another, and would always need secular allies. It is unclear what those who cast blank ballots expect to happen; it isn’t as if al-Nahda can be kept out of the government. Marzouki’s pragmatism is what is needed if the country is going to move to democracy.

James Zogby: “I Was Invited”
James Zogby, the poster boy for all that’s wrong for what passes as an “Arab Lobby” in Washington DC, has pursued a comfortable, air-conditioned career as the self-appointed spokesperson for the Arab-American community. An unprincipled, career opportunist pursuing petty ambitions and false prestige, this cheap political prostitute for the State Department (which organizes most of his appearances in the Arab world) and the Arab oil-Sheiks of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates maintains a busy social calendar which he wants us to believe is a sign of Arab-American political empowerment. The following are a few entries that establish a pattern we have discovered in his writings and talks.

would there have been judaism &/or christianity against islam had there not been the one about a land without a people for a people without a land? not that lie itself, the land theft that was to follow.

Christianity yes, Judaism probably not. Not saying they were ‘best buds’ but if you look at how Muslims spread Islam across North Africa all the way to Spain, you’ll also find Sephardi Jews among them. When the Crusaders took over Jerusalem, they fought against Jews and Muslims. Jews may have been second class citizens, but it’s nothing compared to how the Catholic Church would have treated them during the dark ages and inquisition.

Most ‘Judaism against Islam’ happened in the past 100 years and really is Zionism’s fault. The whole ‘biblical enemies’ thing is a modern creation, invented history.

Most ‘Judaism against Islam’ happened in the past 100 years and really is Zionism’s fault. The whole ‘biblical enemies’ thing is a modern creation, invented history.

Zionism is chalk full of invented history and historical revisionism.

For example, historically, the mass suicide at Masada was seen as a shameful act and a sin. Along came Zionism and since the 1930s had glorified the event. So today, Israel holds official ceremonies at the site, including military swearing-in ceremonies –Sheinit, Metsada Lo Tipol, Masada will not fall again.

If the state of Israel cannot control the scum population of their state, how do they expect to be hailed a democracy and beacon of light in the Middle East? That was a joke – the beacon of light part…

Fact is, the the state apparatus wants what the settlers want. So of course no settler will be brought in on serious charges.

It there any other occupation in the world where the occupying power’s people come in and illegally set up outposts to live? Israel officially doesn’t condone it, but neither do they seriously condemn it. That makes them responsible. Even many ‘official’ settlements have similar origins to the illegal outposts. The difference is they usually asked for permission. G-d isn’t a real estate agent either. Consensus by a minority religion is outweighed by majority consensus of the rest of the world.

I think the Israeli govt position is put the head in the sand and cross the fingers and hope it will all work out like it always has in the past. They know a confrontation with the settlers will be a massive conflgration so they just try to avoid it. Maybe some of those rabbis with all that experience in family disputes could have seen this coming.

Wow, when Israelis set out to “humanise the other”, “Make better wheels”, and “change attitudes” they don’t mess around, huh?
I can’t understand why Witty (the “peacemaker”) hasn’t shown up to rub our faces in this wonderful display of “liberal Zionism”

the barbarity of these jewish settlers
burn
maim
brutalize
why?
because they can
who’s responsible for these crimes?
the perpetrators, of course, along with those who know but remain silent and do nothing about it

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